Fernseh

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The Fernseh AG television company was registered in Berlin on the 3rd July, 1929 by John Logie Baird, Robert Bosch and other partners[1] with an initial capital of 100,000 Reichsmark[2].

The word "Fernseh" is a short form of the German word "Fernsehapparat" meaning television. In German: "fern" means far, "seh" means see, and "apparat" means device/apparatus. The company was mainly known by its German abbreviation "FESE" [3].

Contents

[edit] Early years

Fernseh AG's original board of directors included: Emanuel Goldberg, Oliver George Hutchinson (for Baird), David Ludwig Loewe, and Erich Carl Rassbach (for Bosch) and Eberhard Falkenstein who did the legal work[4]. Along with early TV sets (DE-6, E1, DE10) Fernseh AG made the first "Remote Truck", an "intermediate-film" mobile television camera in August 1932. This was a film camera that had its film delevoped in the truck and a "telecine" then transmitted the signal almost "live"[5].

[edit] Fernseh GmbH

  • In 1939 Robert Bosch GmbH took complete ownership of Fernseh AG when Zeiss Ikon AG sold its share of Fernseh AG.
  • In 1952 Fernseh moved to Darmstadt, Germany and increase its Broadcast product line.
  • In 1967 Fernseh colour TV Products were introduced and manufactured. A full line of Fernseh video and film equipment was made: professional video camera, VTRs and Telecine. Often called "Bosch Fernseh".

[edit] Fernsehanlagen GmbH

In 1972 Robert Bosch renamed its TV division: Fernsehanlagen GmbH. The company supplied almost all the studio equipment for the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich.

[edit] Fernseh Inc.

[edit] Products

[edit] Offices

Thomson still operates offices in the cities of all these acquisitions (see History):

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ http://www.radiomuseum.org/dsp_hersteller_detail.cfm?company_id=7309
  2. ^ http://www.fernsehmuseum.info/fese-historie-00.0.html?&L=0%29
  3. ^ http://www.bosch.com/content/language2/html/3074_3202.htm
  4. ^ http://www.bosch.com/content/language2/html/3074_3202.htm
  5. ^ http://www.fernsehmuseum.info/fese-historie-01.0.html?&L=0%29

[edit] External links

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